The Shoulder
The Shoulder
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Insuranceclever-finch-232

Wrecked my company truck — now I'm stuck between my boss and my insurance. What do I do?

So I'm in a really stressful situation and could use some guidance from people who've dealt with anything similar.

I drive a company-owned pickup for work — it's assigned to me full time, I take it home, use it for job sites, the whole deal. When I started, I signed some onboarding paperwork that basically said I'd be on the hook for any damage I cause while driving it.

Last week I was coming back from a job site, hit a patch of black ice, and slid into a guardrail. Passenger side took a pretty bad hit — door is caved in, the front quarter panel is crumpled, and a couple of sensors/safety systems triggered. Totally my fault, I'm not trying to dodge that.

Here's where it gets messy:

  • I called my personal auto insurance to file a claim and they basically told me tough luck — since it's not a vehicle I own, my policy doesn't cover physical damage to it.
  • My boss is pushing me to pay for repairs and reminding me of what I signed.
  • The repair estimate is way more than I have liquid right now. Like, multiple months of savings.

I don't know if the company has commercial auto insurance that would cover this and they're just not telling me, or if I'm really just fully on the hook personally. I also don't know if quitting would make things worse or if my boss could actually sue me.

Has anyone navigated something like this? Do I need a lawyer? Do I just try to set up a payment plan with my employer? I'm honestly losing sleep over this.

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9 replies

  • 14
    careful-raven-959

    Don't just take your employer's word for what's covered or not. Request a copy of the company's commercial auto policy yourself if you can — or at least ask who their carrier is. Employers sometimes pressure employees to cover damage quietly because they don't want a claim on their commercial policy. You could be getting played here.

    • 9
      warm-heron-471

      Before you do anything else: don't quit, don't sign a repayment agreement, and don't make any payments yet. Once you start paying, you're essentially admitting full liability and waiving any other options. Get clarity on the commercial insurance situation first. That's step one.

  • 11
    daring-dove-918

    Not legal advice, but this kind of situation — employee damages employer-owned vehicle, signed liability agreement, personal insurance won't cover it — is actually pretty fact-specific. The enforceability of that agreement, whether the employer's insurer has subrogation rights, and your state's labor laws can all change the picture significantly. A free consult with a PI or employment attorney wouldn't hurt before you agree to pay anything or sign any kind of repayment arrangement.

    • 10
      quiet-commuter908

      This is exactly what I needed to read today. Thank you.

  • 16
    genuine-bison-391

    This sounds incredibly stressful, especially when you're already dealing with the shock of the accident itself. Please don't just absorb all of this quietly — you deserve to actually understand what you're legally on the hook for before handing over your savings. Sending you good energy, genuinely hope this works out.

  • 20
    bold-heron-272

    Quick question — did you actually read the full onboarding paperwork you signed, or is this kind of a 'I skimmed it' situation? And do you know for certain whether the company has commercial auto insurance, or are you just assuming they might? Those two things matter a lot for how this plays out.

  • 15
    bold-swan-973

    Former adjuster here. Any legitimate business running a fleet is almost certainly carrying commercial auto insurance — it would be borderline reckless not to. That policy covers the vehicle, not just a specific driver. Your employer filing a claim on their commercial policy is the normal path here. The fact that they're pointing at you first makes me wonder if they're either underinsured, trying to protect their claims history, or just don't fully understand their own coverage. I'd ask your boss point-blank: 'Does the company have a commercial auto policy, and have you filed a claim on it?' Put them on the spot.

  • 8
    clear-marten-245

    I went through something really similar about two years ago — damaged a company van and got the same runaround from my personal insurance. The thing nobody told me upfront was that my employer's commercial auto policy actually did cover the vehicle, but my boss tried to make me pay out of pocket anyway to avoid a rate increase on their end. Definitely worth asking directly whether the company has commercial coverage. They may just be hoping you don't ask.

    • 9
      plain-finch-056

      A few things worth knowing: that signed agreement about being responsible for damage is enforceable in many states, but courts often look at how it's worded and whether it was clearly explained to you. A blanket 'you're responsible for all damage' clause in onboarding paperwork isn't always airtight, especially if the company has insurance that should have been the primary coverage. If your boss does sue you, you'd want someone to actually look at that document before you assume you owe the full amount. Not legal advice, just stuff I've seen come up.